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Locating urban knowledge

By: Das, Keshab Fatima, Sheema Gandhi, Kanchan and Sood, Ashima.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Economic & Political Weekly Description: 61(6), Feb 7, 2026: p.41-43. In: Economic & Political WeeklySummary: Much like the fields of law, management, policy, design and architecture, which remain informed by applied social sciences in both practice and research, urban planning in India has its cross-disciplinary cognate in urban studies. The relationship has been ambivalent and sometimes conflicted (Vidyarthi et al 2012). Arriving at or often speaking to similar problematics of inclusion, sustainability and even practicality with respect to land, resource access and allocation of space, urban practice across planning and policy domains has often disavowed the critical traditions that shape the field of urban studies (Chatterji and Soni 2016). In particular, as a professional arena of practice, urban planning has tended to neglect the vast “informal” systems across housing, retail, waste, transport and even climate change that undergird urban “people” as infrastructure in India (Simone 2014; Hussain et al 2024).-Reproduced https://www.epw.in/journal/review-urban-affairs/locating-urban-knowledge.html
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
61(6), Feb 7, 2026: p.41-43 Available AR138637

Much like the fields of law, management, policy, design and architecture, which remain informed by applied social sciences in both practice and research, urban planning in India has its cross-disciplinary cognate in urban studies. The relationship has been ambivalent and sometimes conflicted (Vidyarthi et al 2012). Arriving at or often speaking to similar problematics of inclusion, sustainability and even practicality with respect to land, resource access and allocation of space, urban practice across planning and policy domains has often disavowed the critical traditions that shape the field of urban studies (Chatterji and Soni 2016). In particular, as a professional arena of practice, urban planning has tended to neglect the vast “informal” systems across housing, retail, waste, transport and even climate change that undergird urban “people” as infrastructure in India (Simone 2014; Hussain et al 2024).-Reproduced

https://www.epw.in/journal/review-urban-affairs/locating-urban-knowledge.html

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